Despite the economic significance of micro-enterprises, the empirical evidence on the contextual factors unlocking their growth potential is somewhat scant. This study pitches into this stream of research by linking micro-enterprises, agglomeration economies, and place attachment literature. Specifically, this research explores whether micro-enterprises benefit the most from the location in agglomerations and from having a local manager in charge of the business capturing the connections to the immediate surroundings. By drawing on secondary data from Italian manufacturing companies, our findings show that micro-enterprises are less productive than the larger ones and that having a local manager further exacerbates the productivity gap. However, the influence of place attachment on productivity reverts to positive when micro-enterprises dwell in agglomerated areas, where they are better positioned to capitalize on localization economies. Our study unveils the ambivalent effect of place attachment on productivity, allowing micro-enterprises mainly to achieve higher productivity gains from agglomerations. Theoretical contributions to contextualizing entrepreneurship research and micro-enterprises growth as well as policy and managerial implications are discussed.

Is too small always bad? the role of place attachment in harnessing location advantages / Amato, Stefano; Zare, Shahab; Lattanzi, Nicola. - In: INTERNATIONAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND MANAGEMENT JOURNAL. - ISSN 1554-7191. - 2024, 20:(2024), pp. 265-306. [10.1007/s11365-023-00907-9]

Is too small always bad? the role of place attachment in harnessing location advantages

Amato, Stefano
Primo
;
2024-01-01

Abstract

Despite the economic significance of micro-enterprises, the empirical evidence on the contextual factors unlocking their growth potential is somewhat scant. This study pitches into this stream of research by linking micro-enterprises, agglomeration economies, and place attachment literature. Specifically, this research explores whether micro-enterprises benefit the most from the location in agglomerations and from having a local manager in charge of the business capturing the connections to the immediate surroundings. By drawing on secondary data from Italian manufacturing companies, our findings show that micro-enterprises are less productive than the larger ones and that having a local manager further exacerbates the productivity gap. However, the influence of place attachment on productivity reverts to positive when micro-enterprises dwell in agglomerated areas, where they are better positioned to capitalize on localization economies. Our study unveils the ambivalent effect of place attachment on productivity, allowing micro-enterprises mainly to achieve higher productivity gains from agglomerations. Theoretical contributions to contextualizing entrepreneurship research and micro-enterprises growth as well as policy and managerial implications are discussed.
2024
Amato, Stefano; Zare, Shahab; Lattanzi, Nicola
Is too small always bad? the role of place attachment in harnessing location advantages / Amato, Stefano; Zare, Shahab; Lattanzi, Nicola. - In: INTERNATIONAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND MANAGEMENT JOURNAL. - ISSN 1554-7191. - 2024, 20:(2024), pp. 265-306. [10.1007/s11365-023-00907-9]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11572/401664
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